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Kumi Naidoo

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U.S. Obstructionism Is Hurting Climate Talks

Posted: 12/07/11 11:33 AM ET

We hope, we wish and we pray that the U.S. team at the UN Climate talks in Durban would set aside its obstructive, destructive behavior. But sadly, listening to U.S. negotiators Pershing and Stern, that is not going to happen. For that reason Greenpeace, WWF, Oxfam and the International Trades Union Congress have adopted a joint position demanding that the U.S. stand aside and let those who are willing to move ahead in saving lives, habitats and economies -- in agreeing to a climate saving deal.

Here in Durban, the U.S. is once again trying to kill off the global climate talks by eviscerating the mid-summit draft agreement. On Saturday, the U.S. axed a whole section of the draft agreement that would have offered real protection to those who are being hardest and fastest hit by global warming.

During the talks the U.S. is fond of insisting that they want to be involved, but at the same time makes derailing demands and announces commitments that barely survive the plane trip home.

All of this takes time -- valuable time we can ill afford to waste as the most vulnerable citizens, economies, and habitats reel under the increasing impacts of global warming.

It hasn't always been so. With the signing of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change at the first Earth Summit in 1992, the world agreed that human-caused climate change was an important enough global issue that it deserved its own international law, like issues such as trade, war crimes, and human rights.

The U.S. signed and ratified that treaty, which also included a plan for later Protocols and legally-binding targets to reduce climate pollution. Over the next several years, the U.S. delegation pushed aggressively for a treaty that included a pollution-reduction regime on greenhouse gases and a compliance mechanism ... and then it hit them -- if the U.S. ratified Kyoto Protocol, they would have to deal with being the largest climate polluter!

It is deeply depressing that signing the Kyoto Protocol in 1998 was the beginning of U.S. climate treaty obstructionism, although U.S.neglect of treaties is par for the course.

It's been downhill ever since. The next step in bludgeoning any progress was when the U.S. "unsigned" the Kyoto Protocol. President George W. Bush made history by being the first to unsign a treaty, which is possibly unprecedented in international law.

Before Bush left office, his delegation at the Bali climate talks agreed to negotiate on the main issues that needed global cooperation, culminating in a controversial outcome two years later, in 2009, in Copenhagen. But, in Copenhagen they went on to play a huge part in making that conference possibly the most disappointing and controversial out of all 15 up to that point.

Team Obama picked up where Bush left off, introducing words and concepts into the negotiations in an attempt to mask that the U.S. was not prioritizing the climate. One of the first bombs was announcing that 2005 would be the new base year for a US pollution target, and to speak as if any increase in emissions since 1990 was irrelevant. At the time, 2005 was the year of highest recorded U.S. climate pollution. The U.S. implied that EU efforts to reduce emissions between 1990-2005 were no longer a factor of the negotiations. This allowed the U.S. to argue that "comparability" demonstrated the US was as tough on climate pollution as the EU. The nearly business-as-usual US target was 17 percent under 2005 levels by 2020. It would be 32 percent by 2020 if they were in compliance with the U.S. Kyoto commitment. Obama's team was now disparaging Kyoto as a method of shirking fair and equitable commitments. Anyone can have an ambitious goal for 2050, forty years away.

In Copenhagen the U.S. delegation did everything they could to undermine the importance of a legally binding agreement. They rolled out phrases such as "politically binding" (just means not legally binding) and "pledge and review" (just means not legally binding). Because of Wikileaks we also know that the US was strong-arming countries behind the scenes, with undiplomatic threats and tactics to bolster their bargaining power in the climate talks.

Durban isn't seeing any change in the carnage caused by the U.S.'s participation in these talks. The negotiating position of the largest historical polluter has reached a new low in refuting that scientific consensus demands urgent and rapid pollution reduction.

Leading up to Cancun, a year later, the U.S. was already backing away from weak commitments made in the Copenhagen Accord. It contained an agreement by the U.S. to contribute long term finance, some portion of $100 billion per year by 2020. The U.S. had also agreed to the Green Climate Fund (GCF), notionally the entity responsible for this long term finance. No longer for the U.S. Some of their contribution would go to GCF, maybe. Some of it would be public finance. The U.S. raves about "leveraging private finance" and includes loan guarantees and funding to U.S. companies as part of their contribution. Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation together are the largest sources of its "fast-start finance," or $1.5 billion. Meanwhile, Ex-Im provided over $4 billion to fossil fuel projects last year alone.

It's true that the personalities, egos, and IDs of individual delegates affect overall progress. But for the U.S. it is the basic negotiating position that is tarnishing the UNFCCC process now and for the last thirteen years.

The time has come for the U.S. to stand aside. If it is not willing to save lives, save jobs and save whole ecosystems then it should get out of the way and let those who are willing move on. Any failure to move beyond U.S. obstructionism will be measured in lives.

 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beckjr2000
been there done that & tired of it
04:56 PM on 12/08/2011
Not one Dime of U.S. Tax Payer money to support this Global Fraud!
04:44 PM on 12/08/2011
We are a nation of two right wings. One is vehemently and unapologetically right wing, the other is right wing in every sense of the word, but makes overtures to those on the left just to get their pathetic votes. It's sickening, this is why I've been saying since 08 the progressives need a separate political party, we can do far more for the country separated from the Democratic Party.
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singsingsing
it's not easy being green
08:36 AM on 12/08/2011
The politics in this country dictate our position on climate change. The polarization between the parties has blinded us to what is happening to this planet. We are fiddling while Rome burns, and we will ONLY act when we have to react to a major ecological disaster. Americas collective will is a non starter.
Let's go get a beer and wait til we can all say "WTF, why didn't someone say something".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrew Harvey
Don't F with the Jesus
01:59 AM on 12/08/2011
Name a country that signed the Kyoto Protocol and actually met or exceeded the terms contained therein.

Anyone?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mhh310351
Roosevelt Democrat
01:34 AM on 12/08/2011
http://www.eia.gov/oiaf/1605/flash/flash.html

funny it appears the U.S. meet it's Kyoto Protocol limits even after adding 1,500,000 emigrants per year! You compare 1990 and 2008 and the U.S. shows a net 2.8% reduction in CO2 emissions!

Good old President Clinton was so smart giving permanent most favored trade status to the Chinese & signing all those free trade agreements! We would have never made it without his foresight!
11:15 AM on 12/08/2011
Imagine how much less the US CO2 emissions would have been in 2008 if we hadn't added 50 million people to the country. Perhaps they would have been reduced 20% instead of 3%.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mhh310351
Roosevelt Democrat
12:04 PM on 12/08/2011
I was rereading the graphs and I made a mistake. Dis-regard my comments.
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Son of Liberty 1765
Exposing Government Lies.
07:49 PM on 12/07/2011
THese people are extortionists trying to push the USA into economic decline by sacraficing our economic energy engine so third world nations can burn more fossil fuel as they grow. What a bunch of hypocrites.
07:48 PM on 12/07/2011
This is one of the biggest money making scams to come a long ever! http://wp.me/p1VRMO-4 Maybe next year there won't be enough interest to have COP18, oh wait, a boonedoggle to exotic location on taxpayer's dime, who could resist that.
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05:27 PM on 12/07/2011
Bob Hunter of Greenpeace.

" Pat, this is the beginning of something really important and very powerful. But there is a very good chance it will become a kind of ecofascism. Not everyone can get a Phd in ecology. So the only way to change the behavior of the masses is to create a popular mythology, a religion of the environment where people simply have faith in the gurus."
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
09:53 PM on 12/07/2011
Speaking as one who has been actively involved with the environment for 45 years, long before the concept of climate change dawned on anybody's mind, and as one who does not have a PhD in ecology, I find your statement to be off the mark.
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07:40 AM on 12/08/2011
It's not my statement. It's a quote. And I believe your statement proves the point.
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12:12 AM on 12/12/2011
artleads, we're all actively involved with the environment and speaking for myself, I'm quite healthy and have no problems with global warming. Never been healthier.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mhh310351
Roosevelt Democrat
01:17 AM on 12/08/2011
Oh! you mean PETA?
05:27 PM on 12/07/2011
It is indeed unfortunate that the US in unwilling to do anything about climate change. But it is not surprising. Many on the right refuse to recognize the existence of climate change. Many on both sides are unwilling to do anything that might hinder efforts to "grow" the economy. A lot of people on the left cry that we must take drastic action to address climate change, but refuse to even consider addressing the role the immigration fueled population growth in the US has on our greenhouse gas emissions.

The population of the US, driven by mass immigration of 1.5 million per year plus their children, is projected to explode from 310 million today to 440 million by 2050. Everyone of these people will have a carbon footprint dramatically higher then in the country they are immigrating from, thus driving up US and global greenhouse gas emissions higher then they would be if they didn't come to the US.

A lot of us would like to attain a stable US population by reducing immigration to 250,000 per year. Doing so would dramatically improve the prospect of our nation being able to meet aggressive greenhouse gas emission goals. Yet any discussion of reducing immigration to the US is met with opposition by environmentalists, who seemingly value immigration above the environment.

Yes, there are climate change deniers out there. But there are also population growth deniers in the US who are a huge obstacle to making progress on greenhouse gas emissions.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
10:04 PM on 12/07/2011
There is a link between population growth and the use of fossil fuels. Population spiked during the Industrial Revolution. And as fossil fuel use grew exponentially during the 20th century, so too did population, increasing threefold since 1950. The link between the two is hard to understand, but we must try to do so. It's clear, otherwise, that addressing population as a separate issue from fossil fuel use will not be very productive. Remember also that aborigines have maintained a pretty constant population for 20,000 years. So our values and the way we structure our society must have something to do with population.
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blackwind
Relax, nothing is under control
04:29 PM on 12/07/2011
America's days as a leader of anything have been over for years now. The rest of the world should just take the lead and move on without the US and put a carbon tariff on US imports.
04:11 PM on 12/07/2011
thank god the congress never agreed to this crap!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
04:05 PM on 12/07/2011
Does anyony really believe the US should formally commit to emission reductions without a clue as to how they can be achieved, at what cost and is it even possible with current technology?
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blackwind
Relax, nothing is under control
04:27 PM on 12/07/2011
Who told you no one has a clue as to how to reduce emissions?
There are any number of ways that could be done.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
06:25 PM on 12/07/2011
Reductions can be achieved in all sorts of simple ways, ranging from retrofitting buildings to increasing vehicle mpg to planting trees. The problem is that the fossil fuel lobby doesn't allow any of these things to be done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Milks
Ecologist
02:35 PM on 12/07/2011
Unfortunately, the US position won't change until the rest of the world is already far down the track in terms of solving the issue. And even then, the US probably won't do anything.
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4everright
My heart went boom
01:12 PM on 12/07/2011
Fine, the U.S. can stand aside...but pay for your boondoggle yourselves.